North West tree surgery

Storm-Damaged & Dangerous Trees

Quick, calm help for split limbs, fallen branches, blocked drives and trees that feel unsafe after bad weather.

Arborists making a storm-damaged driveway tree safe with cones and tidy chipper support
Fast help when a tree is unsafe, without leaving the place looking like a work site.

Good for

  • Keep family, neighbours and visitors away from the danger
  • Reopen drives, paths and gardens where it is safe to do so
  • Avoid rushed decisions while the tree is unstable

What we take care of

  • Talk through what you can see from a safe distance
  • Visit, make the area safe and explain the safest next step
  • Clear branches and leave the access route tidy

What shapes the price

  • How urgent the danger is
  • How easy the tree is to reach
  • How much timber and branch waste needs clearing
Tree surgeons carrying out a controlled garden dismantle with protective boards and ropes
Restricted-access removals planned around gardens, fences, sheds and neighbours.

Typical job story

Storm-damaged sycamore made safe in Sale

A tree has split, fallen, moved in the wind or is blocking safe access. The customer gets clear advice, a safer work area and a tidy finish.

Keep clear and call first if the tree is dangerous now.

Simple, calm and tidy

Tree work without the guesswork.

From the first call to the final sweep, the focus is less hassle for the customer and safer choices around the tree.

1

Reassure

We explain what needs doing in plain English, so you know what is safe, urgent and optional.

2

Protect

Gardens, drives, neighbours and public paths are considered before the work starts.

3

Leave tidy

Branches, timber and chip are dealt with as agreed, with a final sweep before handover.

Tree-work triage

Tell us what is unsafe, overgrown or protected.

Share the issue type, urgency, location area and access details so the right route can be planned before anyone approaches the tree.

Photo guidance: take photos only from a safe distance. Do not stand under hung-up limbs, near traffic or beneath damaged branches.
What has happened?